Manage
in sentence
2173 examples of Manage in a sentence
“Ecosystem accounts” have become instrumental in determining how better to
manage
this resource.
As a result, the exchange-rate risk was passed on to those least able to
manage
it: households.
Addressing this two-fold challenge implies expanding the ability of local communities to
manage
the natural resources on which they depend.
As long as Greece’s finances are propped up by international creditors, the country’s policymakers will be able to abdicate their responsibility to
manage
the provision of public goods like education, health care, national security, and infrastructure.
Senators
manage
a roughly 100-member staff, and a campaign staff of several hundreds.
But can they
manage
an executive branch employing millions?
Organizational skill is the ability to
manage
the structures, information flows, and reward systems of an institution or group.
Leaders directly
manage
those who report to them, and they
manage
indirectly by establishing and maintaining systems for their institutions.
Good leaders must
manage
their inner circle of advisers to ensure an accurate flow of information and influence.
Ironically, George W. Bush, the first president with an MBA, was weaker on this dimension than his father, who knew how to
manage
an able group of advisers.
Leaders of social movements also need to
manage
the inward and outward flows of information.
In their pioneering 2013 book Scarcity: Why Having Too Little Means So Much, Harvard’s Sendhil Mullainathan and Eldar Shafir of Princeton University examined the conditions under which people make decisions regarding how they
manage
their jobs, families, and lives.
The EMF (or rather ESF, as some have dubbed it, for European Stability Fund) could
manage
an orderly default of an EMU member country that fails to comply with the conditions attached to an adjustment program.
If France and Germany can barely
manage
any progress in the European context, how can they be expected to lead the world back toward multilateralism and the rule of law?
Indeed, the fatal flaw of free mobility in the EU is that it always presupposed a state to
manage
the movement.
In today’s Asia, it is impossible to
manage
rival ambitions through hegemony, given the size of the countries involved and the structure of their alliances.
Corporate executives
manage
larger companies.
Investors
manage
much larger sums of money.
Sometimes they even
manage
to fit these contradictory criticisms in the same sentence, as though they were accusing someone of firing blanks, but somehow leaving people dead and wounded.
But is everyone really ready to receive such large amounts of capital and to carefully
manage
its macroeconomic impact?
Another casualty will be regulation, at least for a while, as policymakers struggle to figure out how to
manage
an increasingly complex, dynamic, and virtual financial system.
The interdependencies in the global economy (in areas as diverse as financial markets, product safety, infectious diseases, natural resource dependency, and global warming) have outrun our collective capacity to
manage
them and coordinate policy responses.
Openness needs protecting and the best way to protect it is to
manage
the areas of growing interdependence effectively, pragmatically and inclusively.
The Bretton Woods regime collapsed in the 1970’s as a result of the inability or unwillingness – it is not entirely clear which – of leading governments to
manage
the growing tide of capital flows.
Talks on how to avoid a crisis involving Pakistan – and how to
manage
one should prevention fail – are no less urgent.
Had that happened, economic assistance from the US and Japan would have flowed into North Korea, enabling the regime to
manage
the country’s moribund economy much better without initiating reforms, which the military appears to regard as dangerous.
If things do worsen even more, the world, like it or not, must be prepared to
manage
– and even confront – a scenario in which the Kim dynasty, and with it the North Korean state, collapses.
As much as Trump may like to claim that he alone can fix the US, the truth is that government is too complex an enterprise for one person to
manage
and direct.
The Kyoto Protocol created a mechanism for trading carbon dioxide emissions, which promises to
manage
the risks of an even bigger potential disaster: global warming.
In Central and Eastern Europe, post-Cold War reformers had to
manage
the transition from a decrepit centrally planned socialist system to a free-market economy.
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